"We
don't have the money to do a massive media campaign," RI
President Ravi responded, according to DG 7620 Ken Solo's recent Blog post. I suspect President Ravi also knew, but didn't want to cast
shadows, that a massive public relations media campaign would be a massive waste. Contrary to what many Rotarians believe, very
few people in the world, or in any community, have any interest whatsoever in
joining a local Rotary club, much less the discretionary time and money.
The Rotary network serves a niche market, and the most effective niche market PR is
word-of-mouth, be it face-to-face or through social media. The most effective way to build word-of-mouth
PR is for the Rotary network to continuously deliver value to existing clubs and Rotarians that is worth the time, treasure, and talent that they are willing to exchange. Perhaps this common-sense fundamental is best illustrated
by this story from a 2011 Rotatorial and forums/auran.com:
A
few years ago, British Rail had a real fall-off in business. Looking for a marketing answer, they went
searching for a new ad agency - one that could deliver an ad campaign that
would bring their customers back.
When
the British Rail executives went to the offices of a prominent London ad agency to
discuss their needs, they were met by a very rude receptionist, who insisted
that they wait. Finally, an unkempt
person led them to a conference room - a dirty, scruffy room cluttered with
plates of stale food. The executives
were again left to wait. A few agency
people drifted in and out of the room, basically ignoring the executives who
grew impatient by the minute. When the
execs tried to ask what was going on, the agency people brushed them off and
went about their work.
Eventually,
the execs had enough. As they angrily
started to get up, completely disgusted with the way they had been treated, one
of the agency people finally showed up.
"Gentlemen,"
he said, "your treatment here at our Agency is not typical of how we treat
our clients. In fact, we've gone out of
our way to stage this meeting for you.
We behaved this way to point out to you what it's like to be a customer
of British Rail. Your real problem at
British Rail isn't your advertising, it's your people. We suggest you let us address your employee
attitude problem before we attempt to change your advertising."
The
British Rail executives were shocked — but the agency got the account! The agency knew that British Rail had an image
(brand) problem, and its passengers did not consider its service worthy of
their time and money. The agency also knew
that PR campaigns could not correct British Rail’s image problem – only those
who delivered value to its customers could.
Like the agency in this story, Siegel+Gale Research
showed that the Rotary network has a self-image problem. This is the major reason it has difficulty
retaining members and potential donors. President
Ravi, President-Elect John, and President-Nominee Ian now understand that the
Rotary network must deliver services that its niche market - clubs, members, and
donors - consider worthy of expending resources.
This requires internally marketing to the Rotary network so it can understand and deliver Rotary's differentiating image and value proposition. Otherwise, all the external PR the Rotary
network generates will not retain and attract Rotarians or donors.
Rotary's actions speak louder than words and are beginning to show results. Under transitional
leadership, internal marketing (communicating) should continue to improve, as
will word-of-mouth PR and membership retention and attraction.
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